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Values. Name and define five values you believe are especially important for students in the 21st century. Support your proposal with research, theory, and statements the requirements of being successful in an information age economy. How would recommend educators go about teaching those values?.
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Values Name and define five values you believe are especially important for students in the 21st century. Support your proposal with research, theory, and statements the requirements of being successful in an information age economy. How would recommend educators go about teaching those values? Developed by W. Huitt, 1999
Values Values are defined in literature as everything from eternal ideas to behavioral actions. • Criteria for determining levels of goodness, worth or beauty. • Act of valuing • Part of the affective system • Also provide an important filter for selecting input and connecting thoughts and feelings to action
SCANS report (1991) What work requires of schools: A SCANS report for America 2000. (1991). Washington, DC: The Secretary's Commission on Achieving Necessary Skills. Values • Responsibility • Self-esteem • Sociability • Integrity • Honesty
Huitt (1997) Huitt, W. (1997). The SCANS report revisited. Paper delivered at the Fifth Annual Gulf South Business and Vocational Education Conference, Valdosta State University, Valdosta, GA, April 18. Values • Autonomy • Honesty • Benevolence • Integrity • Compassion • Responsibility • Courage • Trustworthiness • Courtesy • Truthfulness
Values Others • The Character Education Partnership, Inc. • The Council for Global Education • Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development
Values Education Values education is an explicit attempt to teach about values and/or valuing. • Inculcation • Moral development • Analysis • Values clarification • Action learning
Inclucation Values as socially or culturally accepted standards or rules of behavior • Social versus individualistic orientations • Certain values are universal and absolute • Major contributors
Kohlberg’s (1984) theory Kohlberg, L. (1984). The psychology of moral development. San Francisco: Harper & Row. Moral Development • Focuses primarily on moral values, such as fairness, justice, equity, and human dignity • Hypothesizes six levels
Kohlberg’s (1984) theory Kohlberg, L. (1984). The psychology of moral development. San Francisco: Harper & Row. Moral Development • Focuses primarily on moral values, such as fairness, justice, equity, and human dignity • Hypothesizes six levels • Other values given less consideration • Based on work of Piaget, Erikson and others • Moral dilemmas
Gilligan’s (1982) theory Gilligan, C. (1982). In a different voice: Psychological theory and women's development. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. Moral Development • Critiqued Kohlberg’s work in terms of moral development of girls and women • Relationships and the morality of care
Gilligan’s (1982) theory Gilligan, C. (1982). In a different voice: Psychological theory and women's development. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. Moral Development • Critiqued Kohlberg’s work in terms of moral development of girls and women • Relationships and the morality of care • Equivocal empirical support • Qualitative analysis versus a priori classification system
Moral Development More recent proponents of this view • Larry Nucci • Daniel Lapsley • Rheta DeVries
Analysis Developed mainly by social science educators • Emphasizes rational thinking and reasoning • Students urged to provide verifiable facts about the correctness or value of the topics or issues • Major assumption--valuing is the cognitive process of determining and justifying facts and beliefs derived from those facts
Analysis A variety of higher-order cognitive and intellectual operations are frequently used 1. Stating issues 2. Questioning and substantiating relevance 3. Applying analogous cases 4. Pointing out logical and empirical inconsistencies 5. Weighing counter arguments 6. Seeking and testing evidence
Analysis A representative instructional model 1. Identify and clarify the value question 2. Assemble purported facts 3. Assess the truth of purported facts 4. Clarify the relevance of facts 5. Arrive at a tentative value decision 6. Test the value principle implied in the decision
Values Clarification Arose primarily from humanistic psychology and the humanistic education movement • Gordon Allport • Abraham Maslow • Carl Rogers • Sidney Simon • Howard Kirschenbaum
Values Clarification Central focus • Rational thinking • Emotional awareness • Examine personal behavior patterns • Clarify and actualize their values
Values Clarification Relies on internal cognitive and affective decision making process An individualistic rather than a social process
Values Clarification Individual makes choices and decisions affected by the internal processes of willing, feeling, thinking, and intending Assumed that as the individual develops, the making of choices will more often be based on conscious, self-determined thought and feeling
Values Clarification Person is seen as an initiator of interaction with society and environment The educator should assist the individual to develop his or her internal processes
Values Clarification Methods used • Large- and small-group discussion • Individual and group work • Hypothetical, contrived, and real dilemmas • Rank orders and forced choices • Sensitivity and listening techniques • Songs and artwork • Games and simulations • Personal journals and interviews • Self-analysis worksheets
Guidelines of the values clarification approach (Simon et al., 1972) Simon, S., Howe, L., & Kirschenbaum, H. (1972). Values clarification: A handbook of practical strategies for teachers and students. New York: Hart. Values Clarification • Choosing from alternatives • Choosing freely • Prizing one's choice • Affirming one's choice • Acting upon one's choice • Acting repeatedly, over time
Action Learning Derived from a perspective that it is important to move beyond thinking and feeling to acting Related to the efforts of some social studies educators to emphasize community-based rather than classroom-based learning experiences
Action Learning Advocates stress the need to provide specific opportunities for learners to act on their values Place more emphasis on action-taking inside and outside the classroom Service learning carries on the tradition of action learning
Action Learning Values are seen in the interaction between the person and society The process of self-actualization is viewed as being tempered by social factors and group pressures
A problem-solving/decision making model (Huitt, 1992): Huitt, W. (1992). Problem solving and decision making: Consideration of individual differences using the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator. Journal of Psychological Type, 24, 33-44. Action Learning • Input Phase • Processing Phase • Output Phase • Review Phase
Action Learning First two phases of Huitt's model are almost identical to the steps used in analysis Skill practice in group organization and interpersonal relations and action projects • Similar to that of Kohlberg's "Just School" program • Major difference--does not start from a preconceived notion of moral development
Summary Each of the approaches to values education has • view of human nature • purposes, processes and methods used in the approach
Inculcation Purpose Methods Summary • Instill or internalize • Change the values of students to more nearly reflect certain desired values • Modeling • Positive and negative reinforcement • Manipulate alternatives • Games and simulations • Role playing
Moral Development Purpose Methods Summary • Help students develop more complex moral reasoning patterns • Urge students to discuss the reasons for their value choices and positions • Moral dilemma episodes with small-group discussion • Relatively structured and argumentative without necessarily coming to a "right" answer
Analysis Purpose Methods Summary • Structured rational discussion that demands application of reasons as well as evidence • Testing principles • Analyzing analogous cases • Research and debate • Help students use logical thinking and scientific investigation • Help students use rational, analytical processes
Values Clarification Purpose Methods Summary • Help students become aware of and identify own values • Help students communicate openly and honestly • Use both rational thinking and emotional awareness • Role-playing games • Simulations • Contrived or real value-laden situations • In-depth self-analysis exercises • Sensitivity activities • Small group discussions
Action Learning Purpose Methods Summary • Purposes listed for analysis and values clarification • Provide opportu-nities for personal and social action • Encourage students to view selves as interactive beings • Methods listed for analysis and values clarification • Projects within school and community practice • Skill practice in group organizing and interpersonal relations
Summary Preferred method of values education depends as much (if not more) on view of human beings and desired outcomes as it does on research on effectiveness